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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Testimony of Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen Before the
Financial Services and General Government Appropriations
Subcommittee, U.S. Senate
March 22, 2023

As Prepared for Delivery
Chairman Van Hollen and Ranking Member Hagerty: thank you for inviting me to join you today. I
would also like to thank you for your leadership of this subcommittee and support of the Treasury
Department.
Two years into this Administration, Treasury continues to serve at the forefront of our nation’s
response to some of its most urgent challenges. We have advanced our country’s domestic and
international economic priorities – thanks to the resources that you have provided us.
Our top priority is to protect the health of the U.S. economy. Two weeks ago, we learned of
problems at two banks that could have had significant impacts on the broader banking system and
the American economy. In the days that followed, Treasury worked with the Federal Reserve and
the FDIC to take decisive and forceful actions to strengthen public confidence in the U.S. banking
system.
We took actions to protect all depositors at the two failed institutions and provide additional
liquidity for banks. This was designed to mitigate risks to the banking system. It’s important to be
clear: shareholders and debtholders of the failed banks are not being protected by the government.
And no losses from the resolution of these banks are being borne by the taxpayer. Deposit
protection is provided by the Deposit Insurance Fund, which is funded by fees on insured banks.
As I said last week, the U.S. banking system is sound. The federal government’s recent actions have
demonstrated our resolute commitment to take the necessary steps to ensure that depositors’
savings remain safe.
Beyond our work on the financial system, Treasury has also led our Administration’s broader efforts
to recover and stabilize our economy from a once-in-a-century pandemic shock. Our Office of
Recovery Programs helped drive the fastest and most inclusive labor market recovery in history by
coordinating the effective implementation of American Rescue Plan relief. Today, the
unemployment rate is near historic lows. Our economy has added over 12 million jobs since the

start of 2021. Our Administration is now building on that progress by effectively implementing longterm investments enacted by Congress.
Internationally, Treasury continues to mount a swift, bold, and enduring response to Russia’s illegal
war against Ukraine. In my visit to Kyiv a month ago, Ukrainian officials told me firsthand about the
critical impact of our work. As part of a broad coalition, we are responsibly disbursing vital
economic assistance to Ukraine. Since last February, Treasury has also implemented over 2,500
Russia-related sanctions. We have degraded the Kremlin’s ability to replace more than 9,000 pieces
of heavy military equipment that it has lost on the battlefield. We have also stabilized global energy
markets and cut into the Kremlin’s revenues by implementing innovative caps on the price of
Russian oil.
The President’s Fiscal Year 2024 Budget requests the necessary resources to continue advancing our
nation’s priorities. I will highlight three imperatives.
First, the budget requests $14 billion in discretionary resources for the IRS. For too long, the IRS had
been woefully underfunded. We are changing that. Our budget request provides steady-state
operational funding that will allow taxpayers to receive the best service possible. It will complement
the one-time, long-term investment in the IRS from the Inflation Reduction Act. We have already
seen our investments pay off. For example, the IRS has answered a million more phone calls during
this filing season than at this time last year. Now is the time to build on this progress.
Second, our budget request shores up our capacity to respond to Russia’s immoral war and advance
other national security priorities. It includes $244 million for the Office of Terrorism and Financial
Intelligence to continue to administer, enforce, and modernize our sanctions regime. It also allows
the office to expand financial intelligence and sanctions-related economic analysis. Further, the
budget requests $229 million for FinCEN to support its efforts to address deficiencies that illicit
actors exploit to evade scrutiny.
Third, this request enables us to continue our work to bolster the long-term foundations of the
American economy. We are requesting $332 million for Treasury’s Departmental Offices, which craft
and implement policies to advance our economic priorities and coordinate government-wide
efforts to promote financial stability and growth. We are also asking for an increase for the
Community Development Financial Institutions Fund, which expands credit and financial support
to historically underserved communities.
I want to end by thanking the men and women of the Treasury Department for their service. Their
dedication and commitment inspire me every day, and I could not be prouder to call them my
colleagues.

With that, I’m happy to take your questions.
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